Return-Path: MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: <1345637062.29868.313.camel@pohly-mobl1.fritz.box> References: <1345533815-5611-1-git-send-email-mikel.astiz.oss@gmail.com> <1345537878.29868.185.camel@pohly-mobl1.fritz.box> <1345637062.29868.313.camel@pohly-mobl1.fritz.box> Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2012 15:52:54 +0300 Message-ID: Subject: Re: [PATCH obexd v0] client-doc: Guarantee prefix in transfer paths From: Luiz Augusto von Dentz To: Patrick Ohly Cc: Mikel Astiz , linux-bluetooth@vger.kernel.org, Mikel Astiz Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Sender: linux-bluetooth-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: Hi Patrick, On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 3:04 PM, Patrick Ohly wrote: > On Wed, 2012-08-22 at 14:39 +0300, Luiz Augusto von Dentz wrote: >> Hi Patrick, >> >> On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 11:31 AM, Patrick Ohly wrote: >> >> diff --git a/doc/client-api.txt b/doc/client-api.txt >> >> index 839a78c..7ca65cc 100644 >> >> --- a/doc/client-api.txt >> >> +++ b/doc/client-api.txt >> >> @@ -466,7 +466,7 @@ Transfer hierarchy >> >> >> >> Service org.bluez.obex.client >> >> Interface org.bluez.obex.Transfer >> >> -Object path [variable prefix]/{transfer0,transfer1,...} >> >> +Object path [variable prefix]/{session0,session1,...}/{transfer0,...} >> >> >> >> Methods dict GetProperties() >> > >> > It would be even better to explicitly mention that the "[variable >> > prefix]" here is the same as the "[variable prefix]" in the Session. >> > >> > Or perhaps change it like this? >> > >> > -Object path [variable prefix]/{transfer0,transfer1,...} >> > +Object path [session prefix]/{transfer0,...} >> >> Hmm, I prefer the original proposal since that imo looks more clear >> how the path is formatted, anyway the point here is that the transfers >> are tied to sessions. > > But as Marcel said, "variable prefix" means "no guarantee made about its > content, none whatsoever". Without knowing Bluez conventions, that was > also my understand when reading the API description. Assigning some > other meaning to "variable prefix" would break with developer > expectations. But we are not changing that, that why we return the object path to you, you will never have to guess it. > Unless the meaning of "variable prefix" gets redefined, "[variable > prefix]/{session0,session1,...}" still doesn't allow the developer to do > path_namespace filtering. Im not sure why this is important? Prefix or variable prefix it does not matter, you will not be able to hardcode nor you should be constructing a path based on the session prefix, so if you are planning to do prefix matching I would strongly advise not to. > How about this: > > -Object path [variable prefix]/{transfer0,transfer1,...} > +Object path [prefix]/{session0,session1,...}/{transfer0,...}" > + with "prefix" as in the corresponding session > >> > Using this knowledge efficiently is not always possible, however. D-Bus >> > itself has a "path_namespace" filter [1], but many D-Bus bindings don't >> > expose it (Python [2], GIO D-Bus [3]). Therefore a client using those >> > bindings still has to receive all Transfer signals and do its own >> > filtering. >> > >> > [1] http://dbus.freedesktop.org/doc/dbus-specification.html#message-bus-routing-match-rules >> > [2] http://dbus.freedesktop.org/doc/dbus-python/api/dbus.connection.Connection-class.html#add_signal_receiver >> > [3] http://developer.gnome.org/gio/stable/GDBusConnection.html#g-dbus-connection-signal-subscribe >> >> Apparently people are not doing a good job with bindings then, arg >> matching is quite essential to things like NameOwnerChanged, anyway >> for what is worth even properties have this race condition with values >> changing in meantime while GetAll/Get/GetProperties is returning, so >> it seems we need to solve this problem by making the transfer >> properties unlikely to change so the application have enough time to >> subscribe to signals. > > "unlikely" doesn't sit well with me. An unlikely failure is still a > failure. Tell me if I'm too pedantic here ;-) I said unlikely because we cannot guarantee that we dont get some unexpected event e.g. remote device crash/disconnects. > I can imagine three ways to address race conditions: > 1. Clients subscribe to signals in advance, before any are sent. Can be done already, but it means you have to listen to every transfer which can cause you application to wakeup a little too much. > 2. Clients subscribe to signals later *and* check the current state. > 3. Clients provide a callback object with methods which get invoked by > obexd. > > The second option increases traffic and depends on being able to check > the current state. Currently this approach is not possible for Transfer > objects because they can get removed before the client checked their > state. I don't thing this is true, we do return the properties of the transfer so you don't need to check the current state just listen for changes, btw if you mean a method call for checking the current state it does happen to have the same race conditions. > The third option has the drawback that there's no standard way of > letting the client declare which of these methods it wants to have > called (in contrast to D-Bus signals). The advantage is that it becomes > possible to clean up temp files after completion of the transfer: add an > explicit "here's your result" callback method and when that fails, > delete the temporary file. We normally used the term agent for this type of object that is registered to act as callback mechanism, in fact this was used before and was just replaced with the current design recently as it was considered more complicated to the client application to implement and did not allow any other application like a download manager to listen for transfer progress. -- Luiz Augusto von Dentz